The Nervous System

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The Nervous System

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The Nervous System. Communication Center. Central Nervous System (CNS): system of nerves, the spinal cord, and the brain that receives signals from environment and sends out responses to those signals Neuron : nerve cell Dendrites : fan like branches that receive impulses - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The Nervous System

Page 1: The Nervous System

The Nervous System

Page 2: The Nervous System

Communication Center• Central Nervous System (CNS):

system of nerves, the spinal cord, and the brain that receives signals from environment and sends out responses to those signals

• Neurons: nerve cell; 3 sections– Dendrites: fan like branches that

receive impulses– Cell body: main area of cell– Axon: long extension that sends

impulses on to other neurons or body cells

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Regions of the Brain• 3 main sections:

1) Cerebrum- main area of the brain; divided into two hemispheres; where language, memory, intelligence, personality, muscle movement come from

2) Cerebellum- back of your brain; controls balance, senses, and coordination

3) Brain stem- connection between brain and spinal cord

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Types of Neurons• Sensory neurons: receive

signals from the environment and send impulses to the spinal cord and brain

• Relay neurons: nerves that make up the brain and spinal cord; process impulses and send response impulses to motor neurons

• Motor neurons: react to impulses from brain and spinal cord; activate glands, muscles, etc..

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They Mighty Reflex• I throw a ball at you. What

nerves first take in the input?– Sensory nerves in eyes

• The input to the brain quickly calculates distance, speed, angle, etc… to conclude if the ball will hit him. What nerve cells to this?– Relay neurons

• What is your reaction? What caused this?– Muscles move body away from

ball; Motor neurons • If input is strong enough, you

don’t even need his brain!

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They Mighty Reflex• Where are relay neurons located?

– Brain AND Spinal Cord• Reflex action:

– When input is significantly higher/lower than normal, spinal cord sends response before brain even gets input

– Cuts only fractions of a second off but can save your life

• Reflex arc:– Sensory impulse travels to relays in

spine, set point comparison causes response on effector neurons

• Explains why we can feel temp, pressure, etc… BEFORE we feel pain (Brain is too slow)

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The Senses

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The 5 Major Senses• Smell• Taste• Touch• Hearing• Sight

• How our brain/body takes in stimulus from the environment

• How we learn about the world

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Smell• Breathing air through your

nose pulls in particulate matter (chemicals floating in the air)

• Olfactory:– collection of receptors in top

of the nose– Chemicals bind to receptors,

and signals are sent to the brain

– Brain interprets good and bad smells based on what chemicals are detected

• Why have a sense of smell?

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Good Smells vs. Bad Smells• Things smell good because

they are good for the body or the mind:Meat- smell of fats and proteinsFlowers- smell triggers release of hormones that relax usFruits- smell of sugars and vitamins

• Things smell bad because they might kill us:Waste material- contain bacteria; no usefulmaterialRotten Food- contain bacteria; bad for digestion

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Taste• Smell and taste are strongly

linked• Taste buds:

- receptors for each of the 5 tastes:

salty, sweet, sour, bitter, umami- Chemical reacts with receptor and signals are sent to the brain

Why do things taste good? Why do they taste bad?

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Hearing• Sound travels as waves

through media (air, water, etc…)

• Eardrum:– Vibrates to changing pressure

from sound waves– Vibrations travel through the

body’s smallest bones(Malleus, Incus, and Stapes)

• Cochlea:– Vibrations from travel into fluid– Fluid activates hire-like receptors

which send impulses to the brain– Ear as a hair for different

frequencies

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Hearing (Balance)• Cochlea as 3 semicircular

canals filled with fluid and motion receptors (hair-like)

• Movement in the fluid triggers impulses that tell the brain direction and orientation

• Small Ca+ stones inside also push down on the hairs

Why?-Feel which way is up/down

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Touch• A collection of different

receptors:– Temperature– Pressure– Pain

• Different parts of the body have higher concentration of touch sensors– Eyelids, fingers, feet, tongue,

etc…• Some receptors fire faster

than others:– You can feel the texture of an

object before its temperature

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Sight• Sight is detecting the photons of light

bouncing of objects– 80% of all you know comes from sight

• Conjunctiva: protective layer; cleaned by tears

• Cornea: transparent cover over eye• Pupil: opening into the eye• Iris: colored membrane that changes

size due to light intensity• Lens: focuses the light to clear the

image; made of clear cells• Retina: special part of the eye that

reacts to photonsImages passing through the lens are flipped and our brain learns to flip them back

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Light Level and Depth• Iris muscles muscles

change diameter to iris– Low light make wider pupil

(dilated)• Need more light

– Bright light make narrower pupil (constricted) • Need less light; may damage

receptors in eyes

• Two eyes = two sets of information– Brain compares sets to

produce 3D image (depth perception)

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Seeing Colors• To see clearly, light must be focused

on the fovea– Center point on the back of the retina;

has most receptors• Rod cells:

detect low levels of light (black and white)• Cone cells:

detect high levels of light (color)S- detect blue lightM- detect green lightL- detect red light

Overlapping signals from cones create the other colors

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Extra Senses• Echolocation: use

sound waves to find objects

• Infrared vision: can see heat of an object

• UV vision: see UV signals

• Electroreception: can sense electric fields

• Magnetoreception: can sense magnetic fields